TradeAssurance helps businesses protect their investment online. Learn how it works from beginning to end in this short demo.

published:13 Jan 2016

views:28317

AlibabaTradeAssurance offers a new way to protect payments, when buying from China. This video explains both the benefits, and the pitfalls. If you found this video useful, click here to learn how we can help you: https://www.chinaimportal.com/all-categories/

I made this video to explain why I use PayPal to buy products overseas on websites like Alibaba. And also to explain how you can send money through PayPal using Alibaba suppliers.
The main reason I use PayPal is for security. In case I receive broken Items, wrong Items or missing items.
It helps avoid any scams which is one of the main reasons people are skeptical about websites like Alibaba.
How do you order using PayPal?
First, you have to contact the supplier and just ask if they accept PayPal as a payment method. Some will not accept it and I stay away from them. If they do accept, they will send a quote with a PayPal email and you send the money via PayPal as "Goods And Services" Then you wait for your Items to arrive.
You will be charged a 3% fee for using PayPal. But they will not charge you directly, they will charge the seller which integrates that 3% in the quote they provide for you and you pay it.
Don't Forget To Like, Comment And Subscribe!
***** FOLLOW ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA *****
Blog: http://www.businessmindsetinc.com/
Facebook: http://www.businessmindsetinc.com/Facebook
Twitter: http://www.businessmindsetinc.com/Twitter
Instagram: http://www.businessmindsetinc.com/Instagram

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How To Pay Your Suppliers - AmazonFBA For Beginners
★☆★ VIEW THE PODCAST: ★☆★
http://privatelabelershow.com/how-to-pay-your-suppliers-amazon-fba-for-beginners/
★☆★ SUBSCRIBE TO THE SHOW ON YOUTUBE: ★☆★
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_wD...
★☆★ FOLLOW ME BELOW: ★☆★
Blog: http://www.privatelabelershow.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/97350...
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/live.dream....
★☆★ RECOMMENDED RESOURCES: ★☆★
http://www.privatelabelershow.com/resources
Welcome To Episode #44 of the Amazon FBA Private LabelShow Podcast!
In this episode, I walk you through the best and main ways to pay your supplier for samples and of course your actual orders.
Listen to this Amazon FBA podcast now!
SUMMARY OF PODCAST:
How To Pay Your Suppliers – Amazon FBA For Beginners
Ordering samples and placing your first order can be an exciting time for sure.
No doubt you have a lot going on in your head as far as what move to make next and how to do it.
Now it’s time to send money overseas to someone you don’t really know.
It can make you nervous.
How do you actually pay your supplier? Is it safe to send the money?
In this podcast I dial it back a bit and discuss the best and most common ways to pay your suppliers.
Amazon FBA For Beginners
Paying For Samples
Paypal – Most popular method. Safe and easy.
Western Union – Use if your supplier doesn’t accept Paypal
Paying For Your ActualOrderWireTransfer (T/T) – Most common way to pay for your order. Shop banks for the lowest fees.
Credit Card – 2.8% fee which can be costly on larger orders.
E-Checking – $15 fee. My preferred method of payment now.
Paypal – Another option to pay. Ensure you know the fees and Paypal rules.
General Tips
Always ensure you get an inspection before you pay for your order
Negotiate your payment terms. 30/70 is most common.
Always opt for TradeAssurance in Aliababa if you can
Always trust your gut. If something seems off then don’t send money.
Amazon FBA Success
Amazon FBA Tips
AMazon FBA For Beginners
Amazon FBA Podcast
Selling On Amazon
Amazon FBA For Beginners

published:08 Aug 2016

views:7814

As part of a global content strategy for Alibaba.com, Hub created a series of explainer animations for Alibaba.com.
The focus of the TradeAssuranceExplainer is to show how this service can help build trust between small businesses and suppliers or manufacturers internationally. Trade Assurance provides a safety net to buyers on Alibaba.com, ensuring a money back guarantee if the quality standards previously agreed are not met, or an order does not arrive on time.
Find out more about Hub's work with Alibaba.com here: http://www.hub.tv/work/alibaba/
http://www.hub.tv/
https://twitter.com/Hub_TV
https://www.facebook.com/HubTV/

The original form of trade, barter, saw the direct exchange of goods and services for other goods and services. Barter is trading things without the use of money. Later one side of the barter started to involve precious metals, which gained symbolic as well as practical importance. Modern traders generally negotiate through a medium of exchange, such as money. As a result, buying can be separated from selling, or earning. The invention of money (and later credit, paper money and non-physical money) greatly simplified and promoted trade. Trade between two traders is called bilateral trade, while trade between more than two traders is called multilateral trade.

Trade exists due to the specialization and division of labor, in which most people concentrate on a small aspect of production, trading for other products. Trade exists between regions because different regions may have a comparative advantage (perceived or real) in the production of some trade-able commodity, or because different regions' size may encourage mass production. As such, trade at market prices between locations can benefit both locations.

Using Alibaba.com Trade Assurance

TradeAssurance helps businesses protect their investment online. Learn how it works from beginning to end in this short demo.

11:04

Alibaba Trade Assurance Explained: What Importers Must Know

Alibaba Trade Assurance Explained: What Importers Must Know

Alibaba Trade Assurance Explained: What Importers Must Know

AlibabaTradeAssurance offers a new way to protect payments, when buying from China. This video explains both the benefits, and the pitfalls. If you found this video useful, click here to learn how we can help you: https://www.chinaimportal.com/all-categories/

New Kick Ass tool Alibaba Trade Assurance

Why I Use PayPal On Alibaba.com

I made this video to explain why I use PayPal to buy products overseas on websites like Alibaba. And also to explain how you can send money through PayPal using Alibaba suppliers.
The main reason I use PayPal is for security. In case I receive broken Items, wrong Items or missing items.
It helps avoid any scams which is one of the main reasons people are skeptical about websites like Alibaba.
How do you order using PayPal?
First, you have to contact the supplier and just ask if they accept PayPal as a payment method. Some will not accept it and I stay away from them. If they do accept, they will send a quote with a PayPal email and you send the money via PayPal as "Goods And Services" Then you wait for your Items to arrive.
You will be charged a 3% fee for using PayPal. But they will not charge you directly, they will charge the seller which integrates that 3% in the quote they provide for you and you pay it.
Don't Forget To Like, Comment And Subscribe!
***** FOLLOW ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA *****
Blog: http://www.businessmindsetinc.com/
Facebook: http://www.businessmindsetinc.com/Facebook
Twitter: http://www.businessmindsetinc.com/Twitter
Instagram: http://www.businessmindsetinc.com/Instagram

How To Pay Your Suppliers - Amazon FBA For Beginners

Get Your ExclusiveJungleScoutDiscount Here:
http://www.junglescout.com/pls
How To Pay Your Suppliers - AmazonFBA For Beginners
★☆★ VIEW THE PODCAST: ★☆★
http://privatelabelershow.com/how-to-pay-your-suppliers-amazon-fba-for-beginners/
★☆★ SUBSCRIBE TO THE SHOW ON YOUTUBE: ★☆★
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_wD...
★☆★ FOLLOW ME BELOW: ★☆★
Blog: http://www.privatelabelershow.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/97350...
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/live.dream....
★☆★ RECOMMENDED RESOURCES: ★☆★
http://www.privatelabelershow.com/resources
Welcome To Episode #44 of the Amazon FBA Private LabelShow Podcast!
In this episode, I walk you through the best and main ways to pay your supplier for samples and of course your actual orders.
Listen to this Amazon FBA podcast now!
SUMMARY OF PODCAST:
How To Pay Your Suppliers – Amazon FBA For Beginners
Ordering samples and placing your first order can be an exciting time for sure.
No doubt you have a lot going on in your head as far as what move to make next and how to do it.
Now it’s time to send money overseas to someone you don’t really know.
It can make you nervous.
How do you actually pay your supplier? Is it safe to send the money?
In this podcast I dial it back a bit and discuss the best and most common ways to pay your suppliers.
Amazon FBA For Beginners
Paying For Samples
Paypal – Most popular method. Safe and easy.
Western Union – Use if your supplier doesn’t accept Paypal
Paying For Your ActualOrderWireTransfer (T/T) – Most common way to pay for your order. Shop banks for the lowest fees.
Credit Card – 2.8% fee which can be costly on larger orders.
E-Checking – $15 fee. My preferred method of payment now.
Paypal – Another option to pay. Ensure you know the fees and Paypal rules.
General Tips
Always ensure you get an inspection before you pay for your order
Negotiate your payment terms. 30/70 is most common.
Always opt for TradeAssurance in Aliababa if you can
Always trust your gut. If something seems off then don’t send money.
Amazon FBA Success
Amazon FBA Tips
AMazon FBA For Beginners
Amazon FBA Podcast
Selling On Amazon
Amazon FBA For Beginners

2:15

Alibaba.com, Trade Assurance Animation

Alibaba.com, Trade Assurance Animation

Alibaba.com, Trade Assurance Animation

As part of a global content strategy for Alibaba.com, Hub created a series of explainer animations for Alibaba.com.
The focus of the TradeAssuranceExplainer is to show how this service can help build trust between small businesses and suppliers or manufacturers internationally. Trade Assurance provides a safety net to buyers on Alibaba.com, ensuring a money back guarantee if the quality standards previously agreed are not met, or an order does not arrive on time.
Find out more about Hub's work with Alibaba.com here: http://www.hub.tv/work/alibaba/
http://www.hub.tv/
https://twitter.com/Hub_TV
https://www.facebook.com/HubTV/

Using Alibaba.com Trade Assurance

TradeAssurance helps businesses protect their investment online. Learn how it works from beginning to end in this short demo.

published: 13 Jan 2016

Alibaba Trade Assurance Explained: What Importers Must Know

AlibabaTradeAssurance offers a new way to protect payments, when buying from China. This video explains both the benefits, and the pitfalls. If you found this video useful, click here to learn how we can help you: https://www.chinaimportal.com/all-categories/

New Kick Ass tool Alibaba Trade Assurance

Why I Use PayPal On Alibaba.com

I made this video to explain why I use PayPal to buy products overseas on websites like Alibaba. And also to explain how you can send money through PayPal using Alibaba suppliers.
The main reason I use PayPal is for security. In case I receive broken Items, wrong Items or missing items.
It helps avoid any scams which is one of the main reasons people are skeptical about websites like Alibaba.
How do you order using PayPal?
First, you have to contact the supplier and just ask if they accept PayPal as a payment method. Some will not accept it and I stay away from them. If they do accept, they will send a quote with a PayPal email and you send the money via PayPal as "Goods And Services" Then you wait for your Items to arrive.
You will be charged a 3% fee for using PayPal. But they will not ...

How To Pay Your Suppliers - Amazon FBA For Beginners

Get Your ExclusiveJungleScoutDiscount Here:
http://www.junglescout.com/pls
How To Pay Your Suppliers - AmazonFBA For Beginners
★☆★ VIEW THE PODCAST: ★☆★
http://privatelabelershow.com/how-to-pay-your-suppliers-amazon-fba-for-beginners/
★☆★ SUBSCRIBE TO THE SHOW ON YOUTUBE: ★☆★
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_wD...
★☆★ FOLLOW ME BELOW: ★☆★
Blog: http://www.privatelabelershow.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/97350...
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/live.dream....
★☆★ RECOMMENDED RESOURCES: ★☆★
http://www.privatelabelershow.com/resources
Welcome To Episode #44 of the Amazon FBA Private LabelShow Podcast!
In this episode, I walk you through the best and main ways to pay your supplier for samples and of course your actual orders.
Listen to this Amazon FBA ...

published: 08 Aug 2016

Alibaba.com, Trade Assurance Animation

As part of a global content strategy for Alibaba.com, Hub created a series of explainer animations for Alibaba.com.
The focus of the TradeAssuranceExplainer is to show how this service can help build trust between small businesses and suppliers or manufacturers internationally. Trade Assurance provides a safety net to buyers on Alibaba.com, ensuring a money back guarantee if the quality standards previously agreed are not met, or an order does not arrive on time.
Find out more about Hub's work with Alibaba.com here: http://www.hub.tv/work/alibaba/
http://www.hub.tv/
https://twitter.com/Hub_TV
https://www.facebook.com/HubTV/

Alibaba Trade Assurance Explained: What Importers Must Know

AlibabaTradeAssurance offers a new way to protect payments, when buying from China. This video explains both the benefits, and the pitfalls. If you found this...

AlibabaTradeAssurance offers a new way to protect payments, when buying from China. This video explains both the benefits, and the pitfalls. If you found this video useful, click here to learn how we can help you: https://www.chinaimportal.com/all-categories/

AlibabaTradeAssurance offers a new way to protect payments, when buying from China. This video explains both the benefits, and the pitfalls. If you found this video useful, click here to learn how we can help you: https://www.chinaimportal.com/all-categories/

Why I Use PayPal On Alibaba.com

I made this video to explain why I use PayPal to buy products overseas on websites like Alibaba. And also to explain how you can send money through PayPal using...

I made this video to explain why I use PayPal to buy products overseas on websites like Alibaba. And also to explain how you can send money through PayPal using Alibaba suppliers.
The main reason I use PayPal is for security. In case I receive broken Items, wrong Items or missing items.
It helps avoid any scams which is one of the main reasons people are skeptical about websites like Alibaba.
How do you order using PayPal?
First, you have to contact the supplier and just ask if they accept PayPal as a payment method. Some will not accept it and I stay away from them. If they do accept, they will send a quote with a PayPal email and you send the money via PayPal as "Goods And Services" Then you wait for your Items to arrive.
You will be charged a 3% fee for using PayPal. But they will not charge you directly, they will charge the seller which integrates that 3% in the quote they provide for you and you pay it.
Don't Forget To Like, Comment And Subscribe!
***** FOLLOW ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA *****
Blog: http://www.businessmindsetinc.com/
Facebook: http://www.businessmindsetinc.com/Facebook
Twitter: http://www.businessmindsetinc.com/Twitter
Instagram: http://www.businessmindsetinc.com/Instagram

I made this video to explain why I use PayPal to buy products overseas on websites like Alibaba. And also to explain how you can send money through PayPal using Alibaba suppliers.
The main reason I use PayPal is for security. In case I receive broken Items, wrong Items or missing items.
It helps avoid any scams which is one of the main reasons people are skeptical about websites like Alibaba.
How do you order using PayPal?
First, you have to contact the supplier and just ask if they accept PayPal as a payment method. Some will not accept it and I stay away from them. If they do accept, they will send a quote with a PayPal email and you send the money via PayPal as "Goods And Services" Then you wait for your Items to arrive.
You will be charged a 3% fee for using PayPal. But they will not charge you directly, they will charge the seller which integrates that 3% in the quote they provide for you and you pay it.
Don't Forget To Like, Comment And Subscribe!
***** FOLLOW ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA *****
Blog: http://www.businessmindsetinc.com/
Facebook: http://www.businessmindsetinc.com/Facebook
Twitter: http://www.businessmindsetinc.com/Twitter
Instagram: http://www.businessmindsetinc.com/Instagram

Get Your ExclusiveJungleScoutDiscount Here:
http://www.junglescout.com/pls
How To Pay Your Suppliers - AmazonFBA For Beginners
★☆★ VIEW THE PODCAST: ★☆★
http://privatelabelershow.com/how-to-pay-your-suppliers-amazon-fba-for-beginners/
★☆★ SUBSCRIBE TO THE SHOW ON YOUTUBE: ★☆★
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_wD...
★☆★ FOLLOW ME BELOW: ★☆★
Blog: http://www.privatelabelershow.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/97350...
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/live.dream....
★☆★ RECOMMENDED RESOURCES: ★☆★
http://www.privatelabelershow.com/resources
Welcome To Episode #44 of the Amazon FBA Private LabelShow Podcast!
In this episode, I walk you through the best and main ways to pay your supplier for samples and of course your actual orders.
Listen to this Amazon FBA podcast now!
SUMMARY OF PODCAST:
How To Pay Your Suppliers – Amazon FBA For Beginners
Ordering samples and placing your first order can be an exciting time for sure.
No doubt you have a lot going on in your head as far as what move to make next and how to do it.
Now it’s time to send money overseas to someone you don’t really know.
It can make you nervous.
How do you actually pay your supplier? Is it safe to send the money?
In this podcast I dial it back a bit and discuss the best and most common ways to pay your suppliers.
Amazon FBA For Beginners
Paying For Samples
Paypal – Most popular method. Safe and easy.
Western Union – Use if your supplier doesn’t accept Paypal
Paying For Your ActualOrderWireTransfer (T/T) – Most common way to pay for your order. Shop banks for the lowest fees.
Credit Card – 2.8% fee which can be costly on larger orders.
E-Checking – $15 fee. My preferred method of payment now.
Paypal – Another option to pay. Ensure you know the fees and Paypal rules.
General Tips
Always ensure you get an inspection before you pay for your order
Negotiate your payment terms. 30/70 is most common.
Always opt for TradeAssurance in Aliababa if you can
Always trust your gut. If something seems off then don’t send money.
Amazon FBA Success
Amazon FBA Tips
AMazon FBA For Beginners
Amazon FBA Podcast
Selling On Amazon
Amazon FBA For Beginners

Get Your ExclusiveJungleScoutDiscount Here:
http://www.junglescout.com/pls
How To Pay Your Suppliers - AmazonFBA For Beginners
★☆★ VIEW THE PODCAST: ★☆★
http://privatelabelershow.com/how-to-pay-your-suppliers-amazon-fba-for-beginners/
★☆★ SUBSCRIBE TO THE SHOW ON YOUTUBE: ★☆★
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_wD...
★☆★ FOLLOW ME BELOW: ★☆★
Blog: http://www.privatelabelershow.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/97350...
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/live.dream....
★☆★ RECOMMENDED RESOURCES: ★☆★
http://www.privatelabelershow.com/resources
Welcome To Episode #44 of the Amazon FBA Private LabelShow Podcast!
In this episode, I walk you through the best and main ways to pay your supplier for samples and of course your actual orders.
Listen to this Amazon FBA podcast now!
SUMMARY OF PODCAST:
How To Pay Your Suppliers – Amazon FBA For Beginners
Ordering samples and placing your first order can be an exciting time for sure.
No doubt you have a lot going on in your head as far as what move to make next and how to do it.
Now it’s time to send money overseas to someone you don’t really know.
It can make you nervous.
How do you actually pay your supplier? Is it safe to send the money?
In this podcast I dial it back a bit and discuss the best and most common ways to pay your suppliers.
Amazon FBA For Beginners
Paying For Samples
Paypal – Most popular method. Safe and easy.
Western Union – Use if your supplier doesn’t accept Paypal
Paying For Your ActualOrderWireTransfer (T/T) – Most common way to pay for your order. Shop banks for the lowest fees.
Credit Card – 2.8% fee which can be costly on larger orders.
E-Checking – $15 fee. My preferred method of payment now.
Paypal – Another option to pay. Ensure you know the fees and Paypal rules.
General Tips
Always ensure you get an inspection before you pay for your order
Negotiate your payment terms. 30/70 is most common.
Always opt for TradeAssurance in Aliababa if you can
Always trust your gut. If something seems off then don’t send money.
Amazon FBA Success
Amazon FBA Tips
AMazon FBA For Beginners
Amazon FBA Podcast
Selling On Amazon
Amazon FBA For Beginners

As part of a global content strategy for Alibaba.com, Hub created a series of explainer animations for Alibaba.com.
The focus of the TradeAssuranceExplainer is to show how this service can help build trust between small businesses and suppliers or manufacturers internationally. Trade Assurance provides a safety net to buyers on Alibaba.com, ensuring a money back guarantee if the quality standards previously agreed are not met, or an order does not arrive on time.
Find out more about Hub's work with Alibaba.com here: http://www.hub.tv/work/alibaba/
http://www.hub.tv/
https://twitter.com/Hub_TV
https://www.facebook.com/HubTV/

As part of a global content strategy for Alibaba.com, Hub created a series of explainer animations for Alibaba.com.
The focus of the TradeAssuranceExplainer is to show how this service can help build trust between small businesses and suppliers or manufacturers internationally. Trade Assurance provides a safety net to buyers on Alibaba.com, ensuring a money back guarantee if the quality standards previously agreed are not met, or an order does not arrive on time.
Find out more about Hub's work with Alibaba.com here: http://www.hub.tv/work/alibaba/
http://www.hub.tv/
https://twitter.com/Hub_TV
https://www.facebook.com/HubTV/

In This TASEpisode:
• Interview with Blare Quane
• Protecting Your Money
• ForeignSuppliers
• TradeAssurancePower
One of the scariest parts of building an Amazon private label business is the fact that at some point you have to send off a big chunk of money to a supplier you have never met, in a factory or warehouse that you cannot inspect in most cases, and trust that you are products are going to arrive at your location or the Amazon warehouse as promised and in good shape. Today’s episode deals with that exact subject in the experiences of one Amazon Seller who had trouble getting his product payments refunded after he decided the products were not up to his quality standards. You are going to learn a lot of lessons from his hard learned experience.
DownloadTranscript for this E...

published: 23 Mar 2016

Tips from Alibaba.com buyers & sellers

AliFest 2012 -- Customer panel featuring Alibaba.com buyers and sellers. They offer practical advice on how to grow a business using Alibaba.com and navigating global trade processes.

Many financial institutions want to provide greater autonomy to their developers but find themselves hemmed in by intricate legacy processes and centralized IT teams that own different parts of the infrastructure and application stack. For Barclays PLC, the solution to this impasse lay in automating the management of hundreds (and, soon, thousands) of accounts, granting developers access to AWS technology directly via AWS Console or API while conforming to bank policy. Key to Barclays’ strategy is “Persephone,” a system that creates accounts, sets policy, defines which services are enabled in the account, and runs Lambda functions to ensure continuous compliance. Persephone relies on services including CloudTrail, CloudWatch Events, IAM, KMS, and others to balance control and productivity....

published: 28 Nov 2017

How Is Money Laundering Detected? The CIA, Drugs, Trade & Finance in Panama Day 4 Part 2 (1988)

Formed in 1989 by the G7 countries, the FATF is an intergovernmental body whose purpose is to develop and promote an international response to combat money laundering. The FATF Secretariat is housed at the headquarters of the OECD in Paris. In October 2001, FATF expanded its mission to include combating the financing of terrorism. FATF is a policy-making body that brings together legal, financial, and law enforcement experts to achieve national legislation and regulatory AML and CFT reforms. Currently its membership consists of 34 countries and territories and two regional organizations. In addition, FATF works in collaboration with a number of international bodies and organizations. These entities have observer status with FATF, which does not entitle them to vote, but permits them full p...

How to Work With Suppliers To Order & Import Private Label Products - Amazon Seller Podcast Ep. 10

How do you find the right Chinese supplier (or any country) to make your private label product to sell on Amazon? What are best practices to be aware of when connecting, negotiating and ordering from suppliers. We cover these topics and more in this week’s episode of The Amazon Seller Podcast.
Best Practices When Working With Chinese Suppliers
When using Alibaba.com, we recommend that you check the following search filters:
Gold Supplier – We recommend that you always check the gold supplier box when searching for suppliers on Alibaba. Gold suppliers pay for that status on Alibaba and it gives some legitimacy to their business. Using a supplier that has been gold supplier for at least 3 – 5 years helps protect you from potential scam issues.
Assessed Supplier/On-site Check – This means...

Get Your ExclusiveJungleScoutDiscount Here:
http://www.junglescout.com/pls
How To Pay Your Suppliers - AmazonFBA For Beginners
★☆★ VIEW THE PODCAST: ★☆★
http://privatelabelershow.com/how-to-pay-your-suppliers-amazon-fba-for-beginners/
★☆★ SUBSCRIBE TO THE SHOW ON YOUTUBE: ★☆★
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_wD...
★☆★ FOLLOW ME BELOW: ★☆★
Blog: http://www.privatelabelershow.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/97350...
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/live.dream....
★☆★ RECOMMENDED RESOURCES: ★☆★
http://www.privatelabelershow.com/resources
Welcome To Episode #44 of the Amazon FBA Private LabelShow Podcast!
In this episode, I walk you through the best and main ways to pay your supplier for samples and of course your actual orders.
Listen to this Amazon FBA podcast now!
SUMMARY OF PODCAST:
How To Pay Your Suppliers – Amazon FBA For Beginners
Ordering samples and placing your first order can be an exciting time for sure.
No doubt you have a lot going on in your head as far as what move to make next and how to do it.
Now it’s time to send money overseas to someone you don’t really know.
It can make you nervous.
How do you actually pay your supplier? Is it safe to send the money?
In this podcast I dial it back a bit and discuss the best and most common ways to pay your suppliers.
Amazon FBA For Beginners
Paying For Samples
Paypal – Most popular method. Safe and easy.
Western Union – Use if your supplier doesn’t accept Paypal
Paying For Your ActualOrderWireTransfer (T/T) – Most common way to pay for your order. Shop banks for the lowest fees.
Credit Card – 2.8% fee which can be costly on larger orders.
E-Checking – $15 fee. My preferred method of payment now.
Paypal – Another option to pay. Ensure you know the fees and Paypal rules.
General Tips
Always ensure you get an inspection before you pay for your order
Negotiate your payment terms. 30/70 is most common.
Always opt for TradeAssurance in Aliababa if you can
Always trust your gut. If something seems off then don’t send money.
Amazon FBA Success
Amazon FBA Tips
AMazon FBA For Beginners
Amazon FBA Podcast
Selling On Amazon
Amazon FBA For Beginners

Get Your ExclusiveJungleScoutDiscount Here:
http://www.junglescout.com/pls
How To Pay Your Suppliers - AmazonFBA For Beginners
★☆★ VIEW THE PODCAST: ★☆★
http://privatelabelershow.com/how-to-pay-your-suppliers-amazon-fba-for-beginners/
★☆★ SUBSCRIBE TO THE SHOW ON YOUTUBE: ★☆★
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_wD...
★☆★ FOLLOW ME BELOW: ★☆★
Blog: http://www.privatelabelershow.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/97350...
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/live.dream....
★☆★ RECOMMENDED RESOURCES: ★☆★
http://www.privatelabelershow.com/resources
Welcome To Episode #44 of the Amazon FBA Private LabelShow Podcast!
In this episode, I walk you through the best and main ways to pay your supplier for samples and of course your actual orders.
Listen to this Amazon FBA podcast now!
SUMMARY OF PODCAST:
How To Pay Your Suppliers – Amazon FBA For Beginners
Ordering samples and placing your first order can be an exciting time for sure.
No doubt you have a lot going on in your head as far as what move to make next and how to do it.
Now it’s time to send money overseas to someone you don’t really know.
It can make you nervous.
How do you actually pay your supplier? Is it safe to send the money?
In this podcast I dial it back a bit and discuss the best and most common ways to pay your suppliers.
Amazon FBA For Beginners
Paying For Samples
Paypal – Most popular method. Safe and easy.
Western Union – Use if your supplier doesn’t accept Paypal
Paying For Your ActualOrderWireTransfer (T/T) – Most common way to pay for your order. Shop banks for the lowest fees.
Credit Card – 2.8% fee which can be costly on larger orders.
E-Checking – $15 fee. My preferred method of payment now.
Paypal – Another option to pay. Ensure you know the fees and Paypal rules.
General Tips
Always ensure you get an inspection before you pay for your order
Negotiate your payment terms. 30/70 is most common.
Always opt for TradeAssurance in Aliababa if you can
Always trust your gut. If something seems off then don’t send money.
Amazon FBA Success
Amazon FBA Tips
AMazon FBA For Beginners
Amazon FBA Podcast
Selling On Amazon
Amazon FBA For Beginners

In This TASEpisode:
• Interview with Blare Quane
• Protecting Your Money
• ForeignSuppliers
• TradeAssurancePower
One of the scariest parts of building an Amazon private label business is the fact that at some point you have to send off a big chunk of money to a supplier you have never met, in a factory or warehouse that you cannot inspect in most cases, and trust that you are products are going to arrive at your location or the Amazon warehouse as promised and in good shape. Today’s episode deals with that exact subject in the experiences of one Amazon Seller who had trouble getting his product payments refunded after he decided the products were not up to his quality standards. You are going to learn a lot of lessons from his hard learned experience.
DownloadTranscript for this Episode: http://theamazingseller.com/ts180
OUTLINE OF THIS EPISODE OF THE AMAZING SELLER
▪ [0:04] Scott’s introduction to the podcast!
▪ [0:50] An introduction to the voicemail Blair sent to Scott.
▪ [1:43] How you can get started with Amazon FBA and join the free live workshop.
▪ [3:30] The voicemail itself.
▪ [6:21] Blair’s conversation with Scott.
▪ [7:59] How Blair began his Amazon private label business.
▪ [9:53] Blair’s process for discovering his first products.
▪ [12:20] The plan behind Blair’s variety of product offerings.
▪ [13:59] The situations with suppliers.
▪ [15:15] The situations Blair experienced that caused issues with his payments.
▪ [17:10] The Trade Assurance (http://tradeassurance.alibaba.com/) dispute process.
▪ [18:40] The difficulties of not being able to get a deposit returned.
▪ [20:27] Blair’s process working from New Zealand.
▪ [21:53] What it took for Blair to set up a U.S. bank account.
▪ [23:35] The hassles experienced shipping by boat.
▪ [24:26] Recommendations about payments, based on his experience.
▪ [31:12] Why you have to go into FBA knowing there is risk involved.
▪ [32:45] The power of using an escrow account through Alibaba.
▪ [35:13] The refund process is multi-stepped, be prepared if you get into it.
▪ [41:50] Scott’s summary of the conversation.
▪ [42:50] Your invitation to the free, live workshop.
▪ LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE
▪ http://www.TheAmazingSeller.com/workshop – register for the free, live workshop
▪ Alibaba (http://www.alibaba.com/) and AliExpress (http://www.aliexpress.com/)
▪ Trade Assurance (http://tradeassurance.alibaba.com/)
Listen to more FBA Talk at http://theamazingseller.com FBA Private Label discussion on how to build and Amazon Business.
Check out my Weekly WorkshopLink: http://theamazingseller.com/workshop/
Checkout my book ’AMAZON SELLING BLUEPRINT’ at http://theamazingseller.com/book
Discounted Amazon Seller Tools: http://theamazingseller.com/resources

In This TASEpisode:
• Interview with Blare Quane
• Protecting Your Money
• ForeignSuppliers
• TradeAssurancePower
One of the scariest parts of building an Amazon private label business is the fact that at some point you have to send off a big chunk of money to a supplier you have never met, in a factory or warehouse that you cannot inspect in most cases, and trust that you are products are going to arrive at your location or the Amazon warehouse as promised and in good shape. Today’s episode deals with that exact subject in the experiences of one Amazon Seller who had trouble getting his product payments refunded after he decided the products were not up to his quality standards. You are going to learn a lot of lessons from his hard learned experience.
DownloadTranscript for this Episode: http://theamazingseller.com/ts180
OUTLINE OF THIS EPISODE OF THE AMAZING SELLER
▪ [0:04] Scott’s introduction to the podcast!
▪ [0:50] An introduction to the voicemail Blair sent to Scott.
▪ [1:43] How you can get started with Amazon FBA and join the free live workshop.
▪ [3:30] The voicemail itself.
▪ [6:21] Blair’s conversation with Scott.
▪ [7:59] How Blair began his Amazon private label business.
▪ [9:53] Blair’s process for discovering his first products.
▪ [12:20] The plan behind Blair’s variety of product offerings.
▪ [13:59] The situations with suppliers.
▪ [15:15] The situations Blair experienced that caused issues with his payments.
▪ [17:10] The Trade Assurance (http://tradeassurance.alibaba.com/) dispute process.
▪ [18:40] The difficulties of not being able to get a deposit returned.
▪ [20:27] Blair’s process working from New Zealand.
▪ [21:53] What it took for Blair to set up a U.S. bank account.
▪ [23:35] The hassles experienced shipping by boat.
▪ [24:26] Recommendations about payments, based on his experience.
▪ [31:12] Why you have to go into FBA knowing there is risk involved.
▪ [32:45] The power of using an escrow account through Alibaba.
▪ [35:13] The refund process is multi-stepped, be prepared if you get into it.
▪ [41:50] Scott’s summary of the conversation.
▪ [42:50] Your invitation to the free, live workshop.
▪ LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE
▪ http://www.TheAmazingSeller.com/workshop – register for the free, live workshop
▪ Alibaba (http://www.alibaba.com/) and AliExpress (http://www.aliexpress.com/)
▪ Trade Assurance (http://tradeassurance.alibaba.com/)
Listen to more FBA Talk at http://theamazingseller.com FBA Private Label discussion on how to build and Amazon Business.
Check out my Weekly WorkshopLink: http://theamazingseller.com/workshop/
Checkout my book ’AMAZON SELLING BLUEPRINT’ at http://theamazingseller.com/book
Discounted Amazon Seller Tools: http://theamazingseller.com/resources

Many financial institutions want to provide greater autonomy to their developers but find themselves hemmed in by intricate legacy processes and centralized IT ...

Many financial institutions want to provide greater autonomy to their developers but find themselves hemmed in by intricate legacy processes and centralized IT teams that own different parts of the infrastructure and application stack. For Barclays PLC, the solution to this impasse lay in automating the management of hundreds (and, soon, thousands) of accounts, granting developers access to AWS technology directly via AWS Console or API while conforming to bank policy. Key to Barclays’ strategy is “Persephone,” a system that creates accounts, sets policy, defines which services are enabled in the account, and runs Lambda functions to ensure continuous compliance. Persephone relies on services including CloudTrail, CloudWatch Events, IAM, KMS, and others to balance control and productivity. Barclays is also working to introduce automated reasoning testing and assurance techniques made available by the Automated Reasoning Group at AWS. Attendees of this session will gain an understanding of the mindset, skillset, and toolset shifts that a diversified global financial institution must make to meet the control objectives of the present while ensuring the agility to accommodate technology change of the future.

Many financial institutions want to provide greater autonomy to their developers but find themselves hemmed in by intricate legacy processes and centralized IT teams that own different parts of the infrastructure and application stack. For Barclays PLC, the solution to this impasse lay in automating the management of hundreds (and, soon, thousands) of accounts, granting developers access to AWS technology directly via AWS Console or API while conforming to bank policy. Key to Barclays’ strategy is “Persephone,” a system that creates accounts, sets policy, defines which services are enabled in the account, and runs Lambda functions to ensure continuous compliance. Persephone relies on services including CloudTrail, CloudWatch Events, IAM, KMS, and others to balance control and productivity. Barclays is also working to introduce automated reasoning testing and assurance techniques made available by the Automated Reasoning Group at AWS. Attendees of this session will gain an understanding of the mindset, skillset, and toolset shifts that a diversified global financial institution must make to meet the control objectives of the present while ensuring the agility to accommodate technology change of the future.

published:28 Nov 2017

views:2779

back

How Is Money Laundering Detected? The CIA, Drugs, Trade & Finance in Panama Day 4 Part 2 (1988)

Formed in 1989 by the G7 countries, the FATF is an intergovernmental body whose purpose is to develop and promote an international response to combat money laun...

Formed in 1989 by the G7 countries, the FATF is an intergovernmental body whose purpose is to develop and promote an international response to combat money laundering. The FATF Secretariat is housed at the headquarters of the OECD in Paris. In October 2001, FATF expanded its mission to include combating the financing of terrorism. FATF is a policy-making body that brings together legal, financial, and law enforcement experts to achieve national legislation and regulatory AML and CFT reforms. Currently its membership consists of 34 countries and territories and two regional organizations. In addition, FATF works in collaboration with a number of international bodies and organizations. These entities have observer status with FATF, which does not entitle them to vote, but permits them full participation in plenary sessions and working groups.[28]
FATF has developed 40 recommendations on money laundering and 9 special recommendations regarding terrorist financing. FATF assesses each member country against these recommendations in published reports. Countries seen as not being sufficiently compliant with such recommendations are subjected to financial sanctions.
In an attempt to prevent dirty money from entering the US financial system in the first place, the United States Congress passed a series of laws, starting in 1970, collectively known as the Bank Secrecy Act. These laws, contained in sections 5311 through 5332 of Title 31 of the United States Code, require financial institutions, which under the current definition include a broad array of entities, including banks, credit card companies, life insurers, money service businesses and broker-dealers in securities, to report certain transactions to the United States Treasury. Cash transactions in excess of US$10,000 must be reported on a currency transaction report (CTR), identifying the individual making the transaction as well as the source of the cash. The US is one of the few countries in the world to require reporting of all cash transactions over a certain limit, although certain businesses can be exempt from the requirement. Additionally, financial institutions must report transaction on a Suspicious Activity Report (SAR) that they deem "suspicious", defined as a knowing or suspecting that the funds come from illegal activity or disguise funds from illegal activity, that it is structured to evade BSA requirements or appears to serve no known business or apparent lawful purpose; or that the institution is being used to facilitate criminal activity. Attempts by customers to circumvent the BSA, generally by structuring cash deposits to amounts lower than US$10,000 by breaking them up and depositing them on different days or at different locations also violates the law.[56]
The financial database created by these reports is administered by the U.S.'s Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU), called the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), which is located in Vienna, Virginia. These reports are made available to US criminal investigators, as well as other FIU's around the globe, and FinCEN conducts computer assisted analyses of these reports to determine trends and refer investigations.[57]
The BSA requires financial institutions to engage in customer due diligence, which is sometimes known in the parlance as "know your customer". This includes obtaining satisfactory identification to give assurance that the account is in the customer's true name, and having an understanding of the expected nature and source of the money that flows through the customer's accounts. Other classes of customers, such as those with private banking accounts and those of foreign government officials, are subjected to enhanced due diligence because the law deems that those types of accounts are a higher risk for money laundering. All accounts are subject to ongoing monitoring, in which internal bank software scrutinizes transactions and flags for manual inspection those that fall outside certain parameters. If a manual inspection reveals that the transaction is suspicious, the institution should file a Suspicious Activity Report.[58]
The regulators of the industries involved are responsible to ensure that the financial institutions comply with the BSA. For example, the Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency regularly inspect banks, and may impose civil fines or refer matters for criminal prosecution for non-compliance. A number of banks have been fined and prosecuted for failure to comply with the BSA. Most famously, Riggs Bank, in Washington D.C., was prosecuted and functionally driven out of business as a result of its failure to apply proper money laundering controls, particularly as it related to foreign political figures.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_laundering
Image By Pen Waggener (Flickr: Economic Landscape) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Formed in 1989 by the G7 countries, the FATF is an intergovernmental body whose purpose is to develop and promote an international response to combat money laundering. The FATF Secretariat is housed at the headquarters of the OECD in Paris. In October 2001, FATF expanded its mission to include combating the financing of terrorism. FATF is a policy-making body that brings together legal, financial, and law enforcement experts to achieve national legislation and regulatory AML and CFT reforms. Currently its membership consists of 34 countries and territories and two regional organizations. In addition, FATF works in collaboration with a number of international bodies and organizations. These entities have observer status with FATF, which does not entitle them to vote, but permits them full participation in plenary sessions and working groups.[28]
FATF has developed 40 recommendations on money laundering and 9 special recommendations regarding terrorist financing. FATF assesses each member country against these recommendations in published reports. Countries seen as not being sufficiently compliant with such recommendations are subjected to financial sanctions.
In an attempt to prevent dirty money from entering the US financial system in the first place, the United States Congress passed a series of laws, starting in 1970, collectively known as the Bank Secrecy Act. These laws, contained in sections 5311 through 5332 of Title 31 of the United States Code, require financial institutions, which under the current definition include a broad array of entities, including banks, credit card companies, life insurers, money service businesses and broker-dealers in securities, to report certain transactions to the United States Treasury. Cash transactions in excess of US$10,000 must be reported on a currency transaction report (CTR), identifying the individual making the transaction as well as the source of the cash. The US is one of the few countries in the world to require reporting of all cash transactions over a certain limit, although certain businesses can be exempt from the requirement. Additionally, financial institutions must report transaction on a Suspicious Activity Report (SAR) that they deem "suspicious", defined as a knowing or suspecting that the funds come from illegal activity or disguise funds from illegal activity, that it is structured to evade BSA requirements or appears to serve no known business or apparent lawful purpose; or that the institution is being used to facilitate criminal activity. Attempts by customers to circumvent the BSA, generally by structuring cash deposits to amounts lower than US$10,000 by breaking them up and depositing them on different days or at different locations also violates the law.[56]
The financial database created by these reports is administered by the U.S.'s Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU), called the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), which is located in Vienna, Virginia. These reports are made available to US criminal investigators, as well as other FIU's around the globe, and FinCEN conducts computer assisted analyses of these reports to determine trends and refer investigations.[57]
The BSA requires financial institutions to engage in customer due diligence, which is sometimes known in the parlance as "know your customer". This includes obtaining satisfactory identification to give assurance that the account is in the customer's true name, and having an understanding of the expected nature and source of the money that flows through the customer's accounts. Other classes of customers, such as those with private banking accounts and those of foreign government officials, are subjected to enhanced due diligence because the law deems that those types of accounts are a higher risk for money laundering. All accounts are subject to ongoing monitoring, in which internal bank software scrutinizes transactions and flags for manual inspection those that fall outside certain parameters. If a manual inspection reveals that the transaction is suspicious, the institution should file a Suspicious Activity Report.[58]
The regulators of the industries involved are responsible to ensure that the financial institutions comply with the BSA. For example, the Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency regularly inspect banks, and may impose civil fines or refer matters for criminal prosecution for non-compliance. A number of banks have been fined and prosecuted for failure to comply with the BSA. Most famously, Riggs Bank, in Washington D.C., was prosecuted and functionally driven out of business as a result of its failure to apply proper money laundering controls, particularly as it related to foreign political figures.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_laundering
Image By Pen Waggener (Flickr: Economic Landscape) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Slides Here: https://defcon.org/images/defcon-22/dc-22-presentations/Bulygin-Bazhaniul-Furtak-Loucaides/DEFCON-22-Bulygin-Bazhaniul-Furtak-Loucaides-Summary-of-attacks-against-BIOS-UPDATED.pdf
Summary of Attacks AgainstBIOS and Secure Boot
Yuriy BulyginCHIEF THREAT ARCHITECT, INTEL SECURITY
Oleksandr Bazhaniuk SECURITY RESEARCHER, INTEL SECURITY
Andrew Furtak SECURITY RESEARCHER, INTEL SECURITY
John Loucaides SECURITY RESEARCHER, INTEL SECURITY
A variety of attacks targeting platform firmware have been discussed publicly, drawing attention to the pre-boot and firmware components of the platform such as secure boot, OS loaders, and SMM. Windows 8 Secure Boot provides an important protection against bootkits by enforcing a signature check on each boot component.
This talk will detail and organize some of the attacks and how they work. We will demonstrate a full software bypass of secure boot. In addition, we will describe underlying vulnerabilities and how to assess systems for these issues using chipsec (https://github.com/chipsec/chipsec), an open source framework for platform security assessment. We will cover BIOS write protection, forensics on platform firmware, attacks against SMM, attacks against secure boot, and various other issues. After watching, you should understand how these attacks work, how they are mitigated, and how to test a system for the vulnerability.
Yuriy Bulygin is a ChiefThreatArchitect. Over the past 8 years he has enjoyed analyzing the security of everything from OS to CPU microcode and hardware. He is now leading a security threat research team, advancing research in security threats to modern PC, mobile, and embedded platforms and protections.
Twitter: @c7zero
Oleksandr Bazhaniuk is a security researcher and reverse engineer with background in automation of binary vulnerability analysis. He is also a co-founder of DCUA, the first DEF CON group in Ukraine.
Twitter: @ABazhaniuk
Andrew Furtak is a security researcher focusing on security analysis of firmware and hardware of modern computing platforms and a security software engineer in the past. Andrew holds a MS in Applied Mathematics and Physics from the MoscowInstitute of Physics and Technology.
John Loucaides is a security researcher who is currently focusing on responding to platform security issues. He has performed security analysis for a wide variety of targets from embedded systems to enterprise networks, developing repeatable methods for improving assurance.

Slides Here: https://defcon.org/images/defcon-22/dc-22-presentations/Bulygin-Bazhaniul-Furtak-Loucaides/DEFCON-22-Bulygin-Bazhaniul-Furtak-Loucaides-Summary-of-attacks-against-BIOS-UPDATED.pdf
Summary of Attacks AgainstBIOS and Secure Boot
Yuriy BulyginCHIEF THREAT ARCHITECT, INTEL SECURITY
Oleksandr Bazhaniuk SECURITY RESEARCHER, INTEL SECURITY
Andrew Furtak SECURITY RESEARCHER, INTEL SECURITY
John Loucaides SECURITY RESEARCHER, INTEL SECURITY
A variety of attacks targeting platform firmware have been discussed publicly, drawing attention to the pre-boot and firmware components of the platform such as secure boot, OS loaders, and SMM. Windows 8 Secure Boot provides an important protection against bootkits by enforcing a signature check on each boot component.
This talk will detail and organize some of the attacks and how they work. We will demonstrate a full software bypass of secure boot. In addition, we will describe underlying vulnerabilities and how to assess systems for these issues using chipsec (https://github.com/chipsec/chipsec), an open source framework for platform security assessment. We will cover BIOS write protection, forensics on platform firmware, attacks against SMM, attacks against secure boot, and various other issues. After watching, you should understand how these attacks work, how they are mitigated, and how to test a system for the vulnerability.
Yuriy Bulygin is a ChiefThreatArchitect. Over the past 8 years he has enjoyed analyzing the security of everything from OS to CPU microcode and hardware. He is now leading a security threat research team, advancing research in security threats to modern PC, mobile, and embedded platforms and protections.
Twitter: @c7zero
Oleksandr Bazhaniuk is a security researcher and reverse engineer with background in automation of binary vulnerability analysis. He is also a co-founder of DCUA, the first DEF CON group in Ukraine.
Twitter: @ABazhaniuk
Andrew Furtak is a security researcher focusing on security analysis of firmware and hardware of modern computing platforms and a security software engineer in the past. Andrew holds a MS in Applied Mathematics and Physics from the MoscowInstitute of Physics and Technology.
John Loucaides is a security researcher who is currently focusing on responding to platform security issues. He has performed security analysis for a wide variety of targets from embedded systems to enterprise networks, developing repeatable methods for improving assurance.

How to Work With Suppliers To Order & Import Private Label Products - Amazon Seller Podcast Ep. 10

How do you find the right Chinese supplier (or any country) to make your private label product to sell on Amazon? What are best practices to be aware of when co...

How do you find the right Chinese supplier (or any country) to make your private label product to sell on Amazon? What are best practices to be aware of when connecting, negotiating and ordering from suppliers. We cover these topics and more in this week’s episode of The Amazon Seller Podcast.
Best Practices When Working With Chinese Suppliers
When using Alibaba.com, we recommend that you check the following search filters:
Gold Supplier – We recommend that you always check the gold supplier box when searching for suppliers on Alibaba. Gold suppliers pay for that status on Alibaba and it gives some legitimacy to their business. Using a supplier that has been gold supplier for at least 3 – 5 years helps protect you from potential scam issues.
Assessed Supplier/On-site Check – This means the supplier/manufacturer has been assessed and has documents showing that they have a central place of business. In the past, some companies would falsely claim a place of business. Assessed supplier filter criteria helps to avoid this issue.
TradeAssurance – “Trade Assurance is a free service by Alibaba.com that’s designed to help create trust between buyers and suppliers. Trade Assurance helps buyers in the event of shipping and quality-related dispute.” This is a very good service to use, especially if it is your first time ordering from a supplier. This service basically holds your payment in escrow until the goods are completely as agreed upon. You can read more about Alibaba Trade Assurance here.
Getting Samples From Your Suppliers
We always recommend getting samples as soon as possible when you find a supplier for potential private label products. Samples are your way to determine if the product is going to meet your needs and if the supplier is worthy to work with. Many of the Amazon sellers who have had a negative experience ordering from Chinese suppliers either did not get samples, or did not get an inspection done on their products (which we talk about below). Even if you have worked with a supplier previously, we still recommend getting a sample for any new product orders. You can expect to pay anywhere from $25 – $125+ for samples. Most suppliers accept PayPal, and many reimburse the cost of samples if you end up placing an order with them.
Compare Several Chinese Suppliers If Possible
We recommend that you try to compare several suppliers if possible. Many sellers choose the first supplier that they contact, not realizing that the quality may be inferior to another manufacturer. One of the best ways to compare suppliers is to order samples from both of them and then compare product quality, communication time and delivery time. If a supplier doesn’t do a good job communicating and delivering the sample, then it is probably a good indication that they aren’t going to be good to work with.
Negotiating Techniques With Suppliers
We only covered a few of the many negotiation techniques you can use. One that we mention is trying to get a lower price by pitting the suppliers price against each other. “Another supplier is offering me this product a $xx.xx per unit, are you able to match that?”. You can also use this strategy to try to get a lower minimum order quantity when first ordering.
Getting Logos & Packaging Designs Made With Chinese Suppliers
Many sellers are confused on who makes the logo and packaging for their private label product. Most suppliers are able to work with designs to add them to your product and packaging, but typically you are going to need to provide them with the actual design. Websites like fiverr.com and 99designs.com are some starting places to look to get designs made. As a warning, neither of these websites are perfect and sometimes they can be frustrating to work with. Communicate with your supplier what they need from you to get logo and packaging made and the formats that they prefer.
Third Party Inspections
We highly recommend getting third party inspections done on your products. As mentioned above, one reason sellers have negative experiences with Chinese suppliers is because they do not get inspections on their products. This is the typical sequence of the inspection process:
Subscribe!
__
http://www.youtube.com/c/Andyslamans
Follow us!
__
Join us at: http://amazingfreedom.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/slamazonbros/

How do you find the right Chinese supplier (or any country) to make your private label product to sell on Amazon? What are best practices to be aware of when connecting, negotiating and ordering from suppliers. We cover these topics and more in this week’s episode of The Amazon Seller Podcast.
Best Practices When Working With Chinese Suppliers
When using Alibaba.com, we recommend that you check the following search filters:
Gold Supplier – We recommend that you always check the gold supplier box when searching for suppliers on Alibaba. Gold suppliers pay for that status on Alibaba and it gives some legitimacy to their business. Using a supplier that has been gold supplier for at least 3 – 5 years helps protect you from potential scam issues.
Assessed Supplier/On-site Check – This means the supplier/manufacturer has been assessed and has documents showing that they have a central place of business. In the past, some companies would falsely claim a place of business. Assessed supplier filter criteria helps to avoid this issue.
TradeAssurance – “Trade Assurance is a free service by Alibaba.com that’s designed to help create trust between buyers and suppliers. Trade Assurance helps buyers in the event of shipping and quality-related dispute.” This is a very good service to use, especially if it is your first time ordering from a supplier. This service basically holds your payment in escrow until the goods are completely as agreed upon. You can read more about Alibaba Trade Assurance here.
Getting Samples From Your Suppliers
We always recommend getting samples as soon as possible when you find a supplier for potential private label products. Samples are your way to determine if the product is going to meet your needs and if the supplier is worthy to work with. Many of the Amazon sellers who have had a negative experience ordering from Chinese suppliers either did not get samples, or did not get an inspection done on their products (which we talk about below). Even if you have worked with a supplier previously, we still recommend getting a sample for any new product orders. You can expect to pay anywhere from $25 – $125+ for samples. Most suppliers accept PayPal, and many reimburse the cost of samples if you end up placing an order with them.
Compare Several Chinese Suppliers If Possible
We recommend that you try to compare several suppliers if possible. Many sellers choose the first supplier that they contact, not realizing that the quality may be inferior to another manufacturer. One of the best ways to compare suppliers is to order samples from both of them and then compare product quality, communication time and delivery time. If a supplier doesn’t do a good job communicating and delivering the sample, then it is probably a good indication that they aren’t going to be good to work with.
Negotiating Techniques With Suppliers
We only covered a few of the many negotiation techniques you can use. One that we mention is trying to get a lower price by pitting the suppliers price against each other. “Another supplier is offering me this product a $xx.xx per unit, are you able to match that?”. You can also use this strategy to try to get a lower minimum order quantity when first ordering.
Getting Logos & Packaging Designs Made With Chinese Suppliers
Many sellers are confused on who makes the logo and packaging for their private label product. Most suppliers are able to work with designs to add them to your product and packaging, but typically you are going to need to provide them with the actual design. Websites like fiverr.com and 99designs.com are some starting places to look to get designs made. As a warning, neither of these websites are perfect and sometimes they can be frustrating to work with. Communicate with your supplier what they need from you to get logo and packaging made and the formats that they prefer.
Third Party Inspections
We highly recommend getting third party inspections done on your products. As mentioned above, one reason sellers have negative experiences with Chinese suppliers is because they do not get inspections on their products. This is the typical sequence of the inspection process:
Subscribe!
__
http://www.youtube.com/c/Andyslamans
Follow us!
__
Join us at: http://amazingfreedom.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/slamazonbros/

Alibaba Trade Assurance Explained: What Importers Must Know

AlibabaTradeAssurance offers a new way to protect payments, when buying from China. This video explains both the benefits, and the pitfalls. If you found this video useful, click here to learn how we can help you: https://www.chinaimportal.com/all-categories/

Why I Use PayPal On Alibaba.com

I made this video to explain why I use PayPal to buy products overseas on websites like Alibaba. And also to explain how you can send money through PayPal using Alibaba suppliers.
The main reason I use PayPal is for security. In case I receive broken Items, wrong Items or missing items.
It helps avoid any scams which is one of the main reasons people are skeptical about websites like Alibaba.
How do you order using PayPal?
First, you have to contact the supplier and just ask if they accept PayPal as a payment method. Some will not accept it and I stay away from them. If they do accept, they will send a quote with a PayPal email and you send the money via PayPal as "Goods And Services" Then you wait for your Items to arrive.
You will be charged a 3% fee for using PayPal. But they will not charge you directly, they will charge the seller which integrates that 3% in the quote they provide for you and you pay it.
Don't Forget To Like, Comment And Subscribe!
***** FOLLOW ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA *****
Blog: http://www.businessmindsetinc.com/
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Twitter: http://www.businessmindsetinc.com/Twitter
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How To Pay Your Suppliers - Amazon FBA For Beginners

Get Your ExclusiveJungleScoutDiscount Here:
http://www.junglescout.com/pls
How To Pay Your Suppliers - AmazonFBA For Beginners
★☆★ VIEW THE PODCAST: ★☆★
http://privatelabelershow.com/how-to-pay-your-suppliers-amazon-fba-for-beginners/
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https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_wD...
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Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/live.dream....
★☆★ RECOMMENDED RESOURCES: ★☆★
http://www.privatelabelershow.com/resources
Welcome To Episode #44 of the Amazon FBA Private LabelShow Podcast!
In this episode, I walk you through the best and main ways to pay your supplier for samples and of course your actual orders.
Listen to this Amazon FBA podcast now!
SUMMARY OF PODCAST:
How To Pay Your Suppliers – Amazon FBA For Beginners
Ordering samples and placing your first order can be an exciting time for sure.
No doubt you have a lot going on in your head as far as what move to make next and how to do it.
Now it’s time to send money overseas to someone you don’t really know.
It can make you nervous.
How do you actually pay your supplier? Is it safe to send the money?
In this podcast I dial it back a bit and discuss the best and most common ways to pay your suppliers.
Amazon FBA For Beginners
Paying For Samples
Paypal – Most popular method. Safe and easy.
Western Union – Use if your supplier doesn’t accept Paypal
Paying For Your ActualOrderWireTransfer (T/T) – Most common way to pay for your order. Shop banks for the lowest fees.
Credit Card – 2.8% fee which can be costly on larger orders.
E-Checking – $15 fee. My preferred method of payment now.
Paypal – Another option to pay. Ensure you know the fees and Paypal rules.
General Tips
Always ensure you get an inspection before you pay for your order
Negotiate your payment terms. 30/70 is most common.
Always opt for TradeAssurance in Aliababa if you can
Always trust your gut. If something seems off then don’t send money.
Amazon FBA Success
Amazon FBA Tips
AMazon FBA For Beginners
Amazon FBA Podcast
Selling On Amazon
Amazon FBA For Beginners

2:15

Alibaba.com, Trade Assurance Animation

As part of a global content strategy for Alibaba.com, Hub created a series of explainer an...

Alibaba.com, Trade Assurance Animation

As part of a global content strategy for Alibaba.com, Hub created a series of explainer animations for Alibaba.com.
The focus of the TradeAssuranceExplainer is to show how this service can help build trust between small businesses and suppliers or manufacturers internationally. Trade Assurance provides a safety net to buyers on Alibaba.com, ensuring a money back guarantee if the quality standards previously agreed are not met, or an order does not arrive on time.
Find out more about Hub's work with Alibaba.com here: http://www.hub.tv/work/alibaba/
http://www.hub.tv/
https://twitter.com/Hub_TV
https://www.facebook.com/HubTV/

How To Pay Your Suppliers - Amazon FBA For Beginners

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How To Pay Your Suppliers - AmazonFBA For Beginners
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Welcome To Episode #44 of the Amazon FBA Private LabelShow Podcast!
In this episode, I walk you through the best and main ways to pay your supplier for samples and of course your actual orders.
Listen to this Amazon FBA podcast now!
SUMMARY OF PODCAST:
How To Pay Your Suppliers – Amazon FBA For Beginners
Ordering samples and placing your first order can be an exciting time for sure.
No doubt you have a lot going on in your head as far as what move to make next and how to do it.
Now it’s time to send money overseas to someone you don’t really know.
It can make you nervous.
How do you actually pay your supplier? Is it safe to send the money?
In this podcast I dial it back a bit and discuss the best and most common ways to pay your suppliers.
Amazon FBA For Beginners
Paying For Samples
Paypal – Most popular method. Safe and easy.
Western Union – Use if your supplier doesn’t accept Paypal
Paying For Your ActualOrderWireTransfer (T/T) – Most common way to pay for your order. Shop banks for the lowest fees.
Credit Card – 2.8% fee which can be costly on larger orders.
E-Checking – $15 fee. My preferred method of payment now.
Paypal – Another option to pay. Ensure you know the fees and Paypal rules.
General Tips
Always ensure you get an inspection before you pay for your order
Negotiate your payment terms. 30/70 is most common.
Always opt for TradeAssurance in Aliababa if you can
Always trust your gut. If something seems off then don’t send money.
Amazon FBA Success
Amazon FBA Tips
AMazon FBA For Beginners
Amazon FBA Podcast
Selling On Amazon
Amazon FBA For Beginners

In This TASEpisode:
• Interview with Blare Quane
• Protecting Your Money
• ForeignSuppliers
• TradeAssurancePower
One of the scariest parts of building an Amazon private label business is the fact that at some point you have to send off a big chunk of money to a supplier you have never met, in a factory or warehouse that you cannot inspect in most cases, and trust that you are products are going to arrive at your location or the Amazon warehouse as promised and in good shape. Today’s episode deals with that exact subject in the experiences of one Amazon Seller who had trouble getting his product payments refunded after he decided the products were not up to his quality standards. You are going to learn a lot of lessons from his hard learned experience.
DownloadTranscript for this Episode: http://theamazingseller.com/ts180
OUTLINE OF THIS EPISODE OF THE AMAZING SELLER
▪ [0:04] Scott’s introduction to the podcast!
▪ [0:50] An introduction to the voicemail Blair sent to Scott.
▪ [1:43] How you can get started with Amazon FBA and join the free live workshop.
▪ [3:30] The voicemail itself.
▪ [6:21] Blair’s conversation with Scott.
▪ [7:59] How Blair began his Amazon private label business.
▪ [9:53] Blair’s process for discovering his first products.
▪ [12:20] The plan behind Blair’s variety of product offerings.
▪ [13:59] The situations with suppliers.
▪ [15:15] The situations Blair experienced that caused issues with his payments.
▪ [17:10] The Trade Assurance (http://tradeassurance.alibaba.com/) dispute process.
▪ [18:40] The difficulties of not being able to get a deposit returned.
▪ [20:27] Blair’s process working from New Zealand.
▪ [21:53] What it took for Blair to set up a U.S. bank account.
▪ [23:35] The hassles experienced shipping by boat.
▪ [24:26] Recommendations about payments, based on his experience.
▪ [31:12] Why you have to go into FBA knowing there is risk involved.
▪ [32:45] The power of using an escrow account through Alibaba.
▪ [35:13] The refund process is multi-stepped, be prepared if you get into it.
▪ [41:50] Scott’s summary of the conversation.
▪ [42:50] Your invitation to the free, live workshop.
▪ LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE
▪ http://www.TheAmazingSeller.com/workshop – register for the free, live workshop
▪ Alibaba (http://www.alibaba.com/) and AliExpress (http://www.aliexpress.com/)
▪ Trade Assurance (http://tradeassurance.alibaba.com/)
Listen to more FBA Talk at http://theamazingseller.com FBA Private Label discussion on how to build and Amazon Business.
Check out my Weekly WorkshopLink: http://theamazingseller.com/workshop/
Checkout my book ’AMAZON SELLING BLUEPRINT’ at http://theamazingseller.com/book
Discounted Amazon Seller Tools: http://theamazingseller.com/resources

Many financial institutions want to provide greater autonomy to their developers but find themselves hemmed in by intricate legacy processes and centralized IT teams that own different parts of the infrastructure and application stack. For Barclays PLC, the solution to this impasse lay in automating the management of hundreds (and, soon, thousands) of accounts, granting developers access to AWS technology directly via AWS Console or API while conforming to bank policy. Key to Barclays’ strategy is “Persephone,” a system that creates accounts, sets policy, defines which services are enabled in the account, and runs Lambda functions to ensure continuous compliance. Persephone relies on services including CloudTrail, CloudWatch Events, IAM, KMS, and others to balance control and productivity. Barclays is also working to introduce automated reasoning testing and assurance techniques made available by the Automated Reasoning Group at AWS. Attendees of this session will gain an understanding of the mindset, skillset, and toolset shifts that a diversified global financial institution must make to meet the control objectives of the present while ensuring the agility to accommodate technology change of the future.

1:00:10

How Is Money Laundering Detected? The CIA, Drugs, Trade & Finance in Panama Day 4 Part 2 (1988)

Formed in 1989 by the G7 countries, the FATF is an intergovernmental body whose purpose is...

How Is Money Laundering Detected? The CIA, Drugs, Trade & Finance in Panama Day 4 Part 2 (1988)

Formed in 1989 by the G7 countries, the FATF is an intergovernmental body whose purpose is to develop and promote an international response to combat money laundering. The FATF Secretariat is housed at the headquarters of the OECD in Paris. In October 2001, FATF expanded its mission to include combating the financing of terrorism. FATF is a policy-making body that brings together legal, financial, and law enforcement experts to achieve national legislation and regulatory AML and CFT reforms. Currently its membership consists of 34 countries and territories and two regional organizations. In addition, FATF works in collaboration with a number of international bodies and organizations. These entities have observer status with FATF, which does not entitle them to vote, but permits them full participation in plenary sessions and working groups.[28]
FATF has developed 40 recommendations on money laundering and 9 special recommendations regarding terrorist financing. FATF assesses each member country against these recommendations in published reports. Countries seen as not being sufficiently compliant with such recommendations are subjected to financial sanctions.
In an attempt to prevent dirty money from entering the US financial system in the first place, the United States Congress passed a series of laws, starting in 1970, collectively known as the Bank Secrecy Act. These laws, contained in sections 5311 through 5332 of Title 31 of the United States Code, require financial institutions, which under the current definition include a broad array of entities, including banks, credit card companies, life insurers, money service businesses and broker-dealers in securities, to report certain transactions to the United States Treasury. Cash transactions in excess of US$10,000 must be reported on a currency transaction report (CTR), identifying the individual making the transaction as well as the source of the cash. The US is one of the few countries in the world to require reporting of all cash transactions over a certain limit, although certain businesses can be exempt from the requirement. Additionally, financial institutions must report transaction on a Suspicious Activity Report (SAR) that they deem "suspicious", defined as a knowing or suspecting that the funds come from illegal activity or disguise funds from illegal activity, that it is structured to evade BSA requirements or appears to serve no known business or apparent lawful purpose; or that the institution is being used to facilitate criminal activity. Attempts by customers to circumvent the BSA, generally by structuring cash deposits to amounts lower than US$10,000 by breaking them up and depositing them on different days or at different locations also violates the law.[56]
The financial database created by these reports is administered by the U.S.'s Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU), called the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), which is located in Vienna, Virginia. These reports are made available to US criminal investigators, as well as other FIU's around the globe, and FinCEN conducts computer assisted analyses of these reports to determine trends and refer investigations.[57]
The BSA requires financial institutions to engage in customer due diligence, which is sometimes known in the parlance as "know your customer". This includes obtaining satisfactory identification to give assurance that the account is in the customer's true name, and having an understanding of the expected nature and source of the money that flows through the customer's accounts. Other classes of customers, such as those with private banking accounts and those of foreign government officials, are subjected to enhanced due diligence because the law deems that those types of accounts are a higher risk for money laundering. All accounts are subject to ongoing monitoring, in which internal bank software scrutinizes transactions and flags for manual inspection those that fall outside certain parameters. If a manual inspection reveals that the transaction is suspicious, the institution should file a Suspicious Activity Report.[58]
The regulators of the industries involved are responsible to ensure that the financial institutions comply with the BSA. For example, the Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency regularly inspect banks, and may impose civil fines or refer matters for criminal prosecution for non-compliance. A number of banks have been fined and prosecuted for failure to comply with the BSA. Most famously, Riggs Bank, in Washington D.C., was prosecuted and functionally driven out of business as a result of its failure to apply proper money laundering controls, particularly as it related to foreign political figures.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_laundering
Image By Pen Waggener (Flickr: Economic Landscape) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

DEF CON 22 - Panel - Summary of Attacks Against BIOS and Secure Boot

Slides Here: https://defcon.org/images/defcon-22/dc-22-presentations/Bulygin-Bazhaniul-Furtak-Loucaides/DEFCON-22-Bulygin-Bazhaniul-Furtak-Loucaides-Summary-of-attacks-against-BIOS-UPDATED.pdf
Summary of Attacks AgainstBIOS and Secure Boot
Yuriy BulyginCHIEF THREAT ARCHITECT, INTEL SECURITY
Oleksandr Bazhaniuk SECURITY RESEARCHER, INTEL SECURITY
Andrew Furtak SECURITY RESEARCHER, INTEL SECURITY
John Loucaides SECURITY RESEARCHER, INTEL SECURITY
A variety of attacks targeting platform firmware have been discussed publicly, drawing attention to the pre-boot and firmware components of the platform such as secure boot, OS loaders, and SMM. Windows 8 Secure Boot provides an important protection against bootkits by enforcing a signature check on each boot component.
This talk will detail and organize some of the attacks and how they work. We will demonstrate a full software bypass of secure boot. In addition, we will describe underlying vulnerabilities and how to assess systems for these issues using chipsec (https://github.com/chipsec/chipsec), an open source framework for platform security assessment. We will cover BIOS write protection, forensics on platform firmware, attacks against SMM, attacks against secure boot, and various other issues. After watching, you should understand how these attacks work, how they are mitigated, and how to test a system for the vulnerability.
Yuriy Bulygin is a ChiefThreatArchitect. Over the past 8 years he has enjoyed analyzing the security of everything from OS to CPU microcode and hardware. He is now leading a security threat research team, advancing research in security threats to modern PC, mobile, and embedded platforms and protections.
Twitter: @c7zero
Oleksandr Bazhaniuk is a security researcher and reverse engineer with background in automation of binary vulnerability analysis. He is also a co-founder of DCUA, the first DEF CON group in Ukraine.
Twitter: @ABazhaniuk
Andrew Furtak is a security researcher focusing on security analysis of firmware and hardware of modern computing platforms and a security software engineer in the past. Andrew holds a MS in Applied Mathematics and Physics from the MoscowInstitute of Physics and Technology.
John Loucaides is a security researcher who is currently focusing on responding to platform security issues. He has performed security analysis for a wide variety of targets from embedded systems to enterprise networks, developing repeatable methods for improving assurance.

How to Work With Suppliers To Order & Import Private Label Products - Amazon Seller Podcast Ep. 10

How do you find the right Chinese supplier (or any country) to make your private label product to sell on Amazon? What are best practices to be aware of when connecting, negotiating and ordering from suppliers. We cover these topics and more in this week’s episode of The Amazon Seller Podcast.
Best Practices When Working With Chinese Suppliers
When using Alibaba.com, we recommend that you check the following search filters:
Gold Supplier – We recommend that you always check the gold supplier box when searching for suppliers on Alibaba. Gold suppliers pay for that status on Alibaba and it gives some legitimacy to their business. Using a supplier that has been gold supplier for at least 3 – 5 years helps protect you from potential scam issues.
Assessed Supplier/On-site Check – This means the supplier/manufacturer has been assessed and has documents showing that they have a central place of business. In the past, some companies would falsely claim a place of business. Assessed supplier filter criteria helps to avoid this issue.
TradeAssurance – “Trade Assurance is a free service by Alibaba.com that’s designed to help create trust between buyers and suppliers. Trade Assurance helps buyers in the event of shipping and quality-related dispute.” This is a very good service to use, especially if it is your first time ordering from a supplier. This service basically holds your payment in escrow until the goods are completely as agreed upon. You can read more about Alibaba Trade Assurance here.
Getting Samples From Your Suppliers
We always recommend getting samples as soon as possible when you find a supplier for potential private label products. Samples are your way to determine if the product is going to meet your needs and if the supplier is worthy to work with. Many of the Amazon sellers who have had a negative experience ordering from Chinese suppliers either did not get samples, or did not get an inspection done on their products (which we talk about below). Even if you have worked with a supplier previously, we still recommend getting a sample for any new product orders. You can expect to pay anywhere from $25 – $125+ for samples. Most suppliers accept PayPal, and many reimburse the cost of samples if you end up placing an order with them.
Compare Several Chinese Suppliers If Possible
We recommend that you try to compare several suppliers if possible. Many sellers choose the first supplier that they contact, not realizing that the quality may be inferior to another manufacturer. One of the best ways to compare suppliers is to order samples from both of them and then compare product quality, communication time and delivery time. If a supplier doesn’t do a good job communicating and delivering the sample, then it is probably a good indication that they aren’t going to be good to work with.
Negotiating Techniques With Suppliers
We only covered a few of the many negotiation techniques you can use. One that we mention is trying to get a lower price by pitting the suppliers price against each other. “Another supplier is offering me this product a $xx.xx per unit, are you able to match that?”. You can also use this strategy to try to get a lower minimum order quantity when first ordering.
Getting Logos & Packaging Designs Made With Chinese Suppliers
Many sellers are confused on who makes the logo and packaging for their private label product. Most suppliers are able to work with designs to add them to your product and packaging, but typically you are going to need to provide them with the actual design. Websites like fiverr.com and 99designs.com are some starting places to look to get designs made. As a warning, neither of these websites are perfect and sometimes they can be frustrating to work with. Communicate with your supplier what they need from you to get logo and packaging made and the formats that they prefer.
Third Party Inspections
We highly recommend getting third party inspections done on your products. As mentioned above, one reason sellers have negative experiences with Chinese suppliers is because they do not get inspections on their products. This is the typical sequence of the inspection process:
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